28 whal food e asked was their -- ,- '" "'tRUFFLES" SAID SAID "NIBLE'tS" 7.27 d corn is only a few J t think Niblets bran known for a us ' ill s have been d years old. Tru N eo b 'ets has already passe? t a Yet 1 11 till W h y . lon g nne. t n ding s · . fth Y were s a truffles as 1 . e. e_Niblets is corn- on - The reason IS sunp Truffles are, for the_cob-without-the-cob. just truffles. Here all P racticable purposes k ' rn els. Cut clean b o g olden e k P are great, 19 :m packed to ee f 'W'\'\ the cob and vacUU R all s boyhood rou.&. f h flavor ec that garden- res d . ) days, back on t h cob- ays T S (corn-on- e- NIBLE the farm. Have yourself some Reg. U. S. pot. Oft. Look for the Green Giant on the label It's the mark of the Green Giant Family of quality foods. Packed exclusively by Minnesota Valley Canning Co., LeSueur, Minn., and Fine Foods of Canada, Limited, Tecumseh,Ont Lawford, James Truex (yes, Ernie's boy), Amanda Duff, and, as the pol- ished Commissar of the Soviets, Cecil Humphreys-all of whom carryon with considerable zest and to good ef- fect in what must already be known as the town's most distinguished harle- quinade. I still think that a fine play could be written about a man named Tovarich, possibly something like "The Cherry Orchard. " I T is a lucky thing for the Theatre Guild that Clifton Webb stopped dancing and lay down on the couch in "And Stars Remain," for he manages to make a totally unreal rôle the most real thing in the play. This is odd, because the play is evidently meant to be terribly, terribly real, with Mr. Webb representing the pixie eletnent. This, I suppose, is the way things some- times work out. The Brothers Epstein have had quite a bit of hard luck in the working out of their original idea for "And Stars Remain." Starting with what must have been the laudable idea of be- smirching the Republican Party in a jovial way and stating the case of the People, they have managed to make their young protagonist so offensive that a noticeable swing to the Right takes place with the audience still sitting in their seats. This makes for giddiness, accompanied by ennui, except when Mr. Webb speaks from his couch. Are we never to have a young radi- cal in a play who is not a humorless, thundering boor? I have known sev- eral young radicals in my day, be- ginning with John Reed, who smiled now and then and even cracked jokes, and who did not always enter a room as if they were the man comIng to take away the piano. I realize that there is serious business at hand, and that the voice with the smile does not win, but it seems to me that our playwrights who have messages to deliver do put them in the hands of an awful bunch of twirps. Possibly the Messrs. Epstein did not mean to tell us what is what, but mere- ly wanted to write a play about dif- ferent types of people. If such was their aim, I suppose that they succeeded, for "And Stars Remain" is certainly about different types of people. There are, besides Mr. Webb, Miss Helen Gahagan, as the young patrician fresh out of jail, Mr. Charles Richman, Mr. Richard Barbee, Miss Claudia Morgan, and others representing one of the "two hundred families," and Mr. Ben